Select Page

Using Quiet Time to Help Students Recharge

by

Amanda Leger | Wichita Collegiate School | Wichita, Kansas

Including quiet time in the class-day gives students a chance to rest, relax, and recharge. Each student chooses an activity to do by themselves at an individual station.

Read Transcript

In my classroom, we have a time that’s designated as stop the world. I call this stop the world because, I believe it’s important for my students to just relax, for just a little bit of the day. In early childhood, many children a nap during the day. They’ll have a lunch or a morning routine and then take a nap. That lets them rest up their bodies for the rest of the afternoon. My children are ages four and five, they take this time to pick a center, or a station, or an activity that they can do individually, all alone. They take that to a special place in our classroom, designated for them. They are not to talk to others, play with others, interact with others. It’s just a time for them to be alone. It’s amazing the things that they create, and what I see as I observe them, stopping the world. I do this for about forty-five minutes to an hour every day, and afterward they are ready and prepared to be their best, for the rest of the afternoon.

Help teachers and children
worldwide by sharing how
you teach.

A global movement of people sharing knowledge and learning from each other, to better educate our children and create hope for the world.

A global movement of people sharing knowledge and learning from each other, to better educate our children and create hope for the world.

Share

       

© 2017 Trees for Life